The Magical Light of Arkhip Kuindzhi

Come and be dazzled

«Birch Grove» 1879 Arkhip Kuindzhi

Courtesy of Tretyakov Gallery

On January 27, Arkhip Kuindzhi’s exhibition at the Tretyakov Gallery—a retrospective in honor of the artist’s 175th birthday—became a news sensation after a 31-year-old man stole the painting “Ai-Petri. Crimea” during the museum’s working hours. The heist, which made worldwide headlines, also sparked a flood of posts and memes on Russian social media, from lighthearted tweets such as, “Anybody happen to be selling a Kuinzdhi?” to others comparing the event to the annexation of Crimeа, with one twitter user remarking, “People are only outraged about the theft because the Tretyakov failed to hold a referendum on changing the painting’s owner among its staff members.”

But Arkhip Kuindzhi—one of the greatest Russian landscape painters of the second half of the 19th century—didn’t need a criminal scandal to bring his works to the public’s attention. The exhibition’s first four days alone saw over 11,000 visitors, and shortly after, online tickets sold out entirely. According to the Tretyakov’s website, Kuindzhi fans must now be prepared to wait between 3-5 hours in a line stretching down Lavrushinsky Pereulok and around the block to obtain the limited number of tickets available at the box office.

Ukrainian Roots

Arkhip Kuindzhi was born in the Ukrainian seaside town of Mariupol in 1842, into a poor family of cobblers and goldsmiths. He began drawing from a young age, but because of his family’s financial situation, Kuindzhi received little formal education and was forced to work odd jobs to help make ends meet. According to legend, one of his employers—a bread merchant—noticed the quality of Kuindzhi’s drawings and encouraged him to travel to Crimea to study under the Russian Romantic marine painter Ivan Aivazovsky.

In 1855, Kuindzhi walked the 427 kilometers from Mariupol to Aivazovsky’s studio in Feodosia, Ukraine. Though Aivazovsky declined to work with the “talentless” young artist, Kuindzhi was able to study the principles of painting under one of Aivazovsky’s students, A.I. Fessler, and in 1868 moved to Saint Petersburg to attend the Academy of Arts.

«Dnieper in the Morning» 1881 Arkhip Kuindzhi

Courtesy of Tretyakov Gallery

The Wanderers

Kuindzhi’s rise as a landscape painter in the late 19th century happened to coincide with an important moment in Russian art history: the founding of the Peredvizhniki—often translated to “wanderers” or “itinerants”—movement. In 1863, frustrated by the Saint Petersburg Academy of Art’s adherence to Neoclassical European techniques, 14 students refused to participate in the Academy’s annual Gold Medal competition upon discovering that the chosen topic was the painting “The Entrance of Odin into Valhalla.”

Instead of painting scenes from ancient Norse mythology, the students wanted to capture the landscape of contemporary Russia, with its peasants, poverty, and natural beauty. In 1870 they formed the “Society of Itinerant Artists,” which arranged over 48 mobile exhibitions between 1871 and 1923. From 1870—1880, Kuindzhi actively participated in the Wanderers’ exhibitions, and at the seventh travelling exhibition gained the public’s attention with his painting “Birch Grove,” in which Kuindzhi meticulously displayed the effects of sunlight washing over a forest.

“These are not paints, this is not a picture,” one critic wrote of “Birch Grove.” “It is nature itself, full of air and sunlight; it is not painted, but by some miracle the canvas was turned into a glade and a forest.”

«Night on the Dnieper» 1882 Arkhip Kuindzhi

Courtesy of Tretyakov Gallery

Earth and sky

Visitors of Kuindzhi’s current exhibition seem to share the same opinion. The exhibition—which spans two floors of the Tretyakov’s Engineering Building—is organized thematically, with the first section—entitled “The Earth Attraction”—featuring paintings that made Kuindzhi famous during his time with the Wanderers, many of which depict forests and glades bathed in various degrees of light. “A pine tree, a pine tree,” one woman muttered over and over, as if in a trance. “It looks just like a photograph!”

The second floor begins with the section “Mystery of the Night.” Kuindzhi was a reclusive and spiritual man who believed that time spent alone in nature—especially at night—helped reveal the mysteries of the universe. “Mystery of the Night” features paintings of blazing orange sunsets against a blackening night sky, red sunsets over stark cliff faces, and nightscapes of Ukrainian rivers bathed in a greenish, otherworldly moonlight. The famous painting “Moonlit Night Over the Dnieper” (1880) marks Kuindzhi’s break with the the Wanderers —he stopped participating in travelling exhibitions but continued to enjoy widespread success despite largely living in seclusion for the last thirty years of his life.

The section “In the Space of Eternity” shows paintings from this period of reclusion, most of which didn’t leave Kuindzhi’s studio during his lifetime. The paintings from this later period still highlight Kuindzhi’s lifelong fascination with light, with settings ranging from snowy mountain peaks to seasides half-hidden behind fog, as in the famous painting “Fog on the Sea” (1905-1908). The last section, “Ahead of Time,” is dedicated to Kuindzhi’s more experimental works, many of which tend towards impressionism and indicate Kuindzhi’s interest in new developments in painting technology. The artist constantly experimented with creating new paints, and visitors can learn more about Kuindzhi’s pigments in a special multimedia exhibition located on the gallery’s second floor.

Undoubtedly, the long wait to get into the exhibition is partially due to visitors’ reluctance to leave Kuindzhi’s world of color and light.

“I came completely unprepared,” one visitor commented, “and was immediately seduced by Kuindzhi’s paintings. You can look at them for hours and not notice how much time has passed.”

There’s still time to be entranced by the masterpieces of Arkhip Kuindzhi. The exhibition runs until February 17.